I imagine that a dozen polls would show the same results: about 70 percent of JLU fans would pay $50 for the remaining sets, give or take a certain margin of error.

That's assuming that 100% of the people who responded to the poll were hardcore collectors who bought everything else, which I don't think is the case. I'd be willing to bet that if a poll was taken about about $20 3-packs at retail (and this poll probably exists somewhere, but I can't be bothered to look for it right now), you'd get the same 200-300 respondents and the same 70% responding yes. As I mentioned before, I think this poll is pretty consistent with the baseline.

Can someone post the link over at Save The JLU on Facebook? I tried but it didn't show up. There are 1,400 people that like that page. If we can spread the word there and get more people to vote, we might have a shot at these figures!

Last edited by MisterMiracle on Sat Jan 28, 2012 12:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.

At first my post disappeared too, even when I hit refresh. Then I hit the "Everyone (most recent) link right under the row of pics at the top of the page. There are around 5 such posts with a link to Custom Justice.

And another for animated Atrocitous. (And some monster critter thing.) Gee, all these prototypes sure do fly in the face of what Mattel tells us about there being no plans for an animated GL line at this time. But Mattel would never lie to us, would they?

I want figures of GTAS, I want an actual animated Hal Jordan. Mattel make it so... I don't care how much it costs you, make the figures good quality and affordable for me, (5 bucks, no more than that.)

whakojacko1976 wrote:

Are those arms ball-jointed?

Edit: Yeah they do look ball jointed... awesome, but why couldn't they do that for JLU? Curse you mattel!!!

It's very possible those prototypes were made with the pitch for the animated series. What cartoon is pitched without a figure line now-a-days anyway? But not everything prototyped ever sees the light of day... perhaps what someone said was right, because of the movie and that dud line of figures no one will touch these?

It's very possible those prototypes were made with the pitch for the animated series. What cartoon is pitched without a figure line now-a-days anyway? But not everything prototyped ever see the light of day...

Exactly!!! The best thing Mattel can do is make sure none of the following prototypes sees the light of day! After all, for a company like Mattel, figures like:

It's very possible those prototypes were made with the pitch for the animated series. What cartoon is pitched without a figure line now-a-days anyway? But not everything prototyped ever sees the light of day... perhaps what someone said was right, because of the movie and that dud line of figures no one will touch these?

If they were prototypes for a line pitch they would be internal first-shots from low-yield molds that were to be hand-painted. These wouldn't show up from a Hong Kong/Chinese seller. The first shots on eBay are from steel molds tooled for factory production, so they would have to have been given the green light from the manufacturer (Mattel) to turn the machines on for factory-made mold tests or painted loose & packaged samples.

The line is definitely farther along than Mattel would like people to believe. Production has probably started, but not to a point where they have to mass-produce to fill retailer orders (because there probably are none).

/\ What Chip said. They got far enough along in the process to tool the molds. Again, just like JLU figures like Toyman, it's possible that retail support shriveled up, and like many, many other toys in the past, these may or may not ever see the light of day.

I'd say that's almost a certainty, considering the amount of GL product rotting on the pegs at every retail store. I'd be surprised if anybody even considered a GL toy for the next decade. That's how long we'll be finding Kilowogs at closeout stores.

Talk about amazing prototypes! I would definitely start collecting those, but sadly as many have said it might not make the light of day. Those guys at Mattel must have been idiots to be thinking Green Lantern was going to be a success. No one knows who Green Lantern is and not a lot of people like the color Green. Shouldn't that be a warning from the get-go?!